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21 matches on "Bellaire (Ohio)"
Ohio River photograph
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Ohio River photograph  Save
Description: Panoramic photograph showing the Ohio River near the town of Bellaire, Ohio, during the early 20th century. Bellaire, incorporated in 1857, is located at the confluence of McMahon Creek and the Ohio River in Belmont County, Ohio. Bridges spanning the river connect people and railroads to West Virginia. Jacob Davis acquired the land on which the town was eventually laid out in 1802, naming it Bel Air after his home in Maryland. His son, Jacob Davis, Jr., laid out the town in 1834. Multiple variations of the town name were used in the early 19th century: when the first post office was established in 1841 the town was listed as Bell Air, and after 1870, the town was called Bellaire. Several railroads built lines through Bellaire in the 1850s that stimulated the growth of local industries such as coal mining, clay, limestone and glass manufacturing. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV88_B01F12_01
Subjects: Bellaire (Ohio); Ohio River; Bridges--Ohio; Landscape photography; Rivers--Ohio;
Places: Bellaire (Ohio); Belmont County (Ohio)
 
Bellaire aerial photograph
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Bellaire aerial photograph  Save
Description: Elevated panoramic photograph showing the town of Bellaire, Ohio, during the early 20th century. Bellaire, incorporated in 1857, is located at the confluence of McMahon Creek and the Ohio River in Belmont County, Ohio. Bridges spanning the river connect people and railroads to West Virginia. Jacob Davis acquired the land on which the town was eventually laid out in 1802, naming it Bel Air after his home in Maryland. His son, Jacob Davis, Jr., laid out the town in 1834. Multiple variations of the town name were used in the early 19th century: when the first post office was established in 1841 the town was listed as Bell Air, and after 1870, the town was called Bellaire. Several railroads built lines through Bellaire in the 1850s that stimulated the growth of local industries such as coal mining, clay, limestone and glass manufacturing. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV88_B01F03_03
Subjects: Bellaire (Ohio); Ohio River; Cities and towns--Ohio; Bridges--Ohio; Landscape photography; Aerial views;
Places: Bellaire (Ohio); Belmont County (Ohio)
 
Bellaire railroad bridge photograph
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Bellaire railroad bridge photograph  Save
Description: Panoramic photograph showing trains on a small railroad bridge in the town of Bellaire, Ohio, during the early 20th century. Bellaire, incorporated in 1857, is located at the confluence of McMahon Creek and the Ohio River in Belmont County, Ohio. Bridges spanning the river connect people and railroads to West Virginia. Jacob Davis acquired the land on which the town was eventually laid out in 1802, naming it Bel Air after his home in Maryland. His son, Jacob Davis, Jr., laid out the town in 1834. Multiple variations of the town name were used in the early 19th century: when the first post office was established in 1841 the town was listed as Bell Air, and after 1870, the town was called Bellaire. Several railroads built lines through Bellaire in the 1850s that stimulated the growth of local industries such as coal mining, clay, limestone and glass manufacturing. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV88_B01F14_02
Subjects: Bellaire (Ohio); Ohio River; Bridges--Ohio; Trains; Transportation--Ohio; Railroads--Ohio;
Places: Bellaire (Ohio); Belmont County (Ohio)
 
Bellaire train depot photograph
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Bellaire train depot photograph  Save
Description: Panoramic photograph showing railways and a railroad depot in the town of Bellaire, Ohio, during the early 20th century. Bellaire, incorporated in 1857, is located at the confluence of McMahon Creek and the Ohio River in Belmont County, Ohio. Bridges spanning the river connect people and railroads to West Virginia. Jacob Davis acquired the land on which the town was eventually laid out in 1802, naming it Bel Air after his home in Maryland. His son, Jacob Davis, Jr., laid out the town in 1834. Multiple variations of the town name were used in the early 19th century: when the first post office was established in 1841 the town was listed as Bell Air, and after 1870, the town was called Bellaire. Several railroads built lines through Bellaire in the 1850s that stimulated the growth of local industries such as coal mining, clay, limestone and glass manufacturing. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV88_B01F14_01
Subjects: Bellaire (Ohio); Railroad terminals--Ohio; Railroads--Ohio; Transportation; Trains;
Places: Bellaire (Ohio); Belmont County (Ohio)
 
Misses Jones & Cotter trade card
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Misses Jones & Cotter trade card  Save
Description: Dated ca. 1900, this is a trade card advertising Misses Jones & Cotter, a fashion accessories shop in Bellaire, Ohio. The drawing shows a woman's arm ornamented with a gold bracelet and a pink and white cloth draped over the forearm, and she holds a bouquet of blue and pink flowers in her hand. The text reads "Misses Jones & Cotter, Millinery Goods, Notions, Plumes, Feathers, Fancy Goods, etc., Cor[ner]. Belmont and 32nd Sts., Bellaire, Ohio." View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: VFM5933_02
Subjects: Advertisements; Fashion; Clothing and dress; Dress accessories; Hats; Bellaire (Ohio)
Places: Bellaire (Ohio); Belmont County (Ohio)
 
Bellaire aerial photograph
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Bellaire aerial photograph  Save
Description: Elevated panoramic photograph taken near the town of Bellaire, Ohio, during the early 20th century. Written at the bottom of a matching photograph is the caption "Georgetown from Tunnel Hill." Bellaire, incorporated in 1857, is located at the confluence of McMahon Creek and the Ohio River in Belmont County, Ohio. Bridges spanning the river connect people and railroads to West Virginia. Jacob Davis acquired the land on which the town was eventually laid out in 1802, naming it Bel Air after his home in Maryland. His son, Jacob Davis, Jr., laid out the town in 1834. Multiple variations of the town name were used in the early 19th century: when the first post office was established in 1841 the town was listed as Bell Air, and after 1870, the town was called Bellaire. Several railroads built lines through Bellaire in the 1850s that stimulated the growth of local industries such as coal mining, clay, limestone and glass manufacturing. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV88_B01F03_01
Subjects: Bellaire (Ohio); Ohio River; Bridges--Ohio; Landscape photography; Aerial views;
Places: Bellaire (Ohio); Belmont County (Ohio)
 
Bellaire aerial photograph
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Bellaire aerial photograph  Save
Description: Elevated panoramic photograph taken near the town of Bellaire, Ohio, during the early 20th century. Written at the bottom of the photograph is the caption "Georgetown from Tunnel Hill." Bellaire, incorporated in 1857, is located at the confluence of McMahon Creek and the Ohio River in Belmont County, Ohio. Bridges spanning the river connect people and railroads to West Virginia. Jacob Davis acquired the land on which the town was eventually laid out in 1802, naming it Bel Air after his home in Maryland. His son, Jacob Davis, Jr., laid out the town in 1834. Multiple variations of the town name were used in the early 19th century: when the first post office was established in 1841 the town was listed as Bell Air, and after 1870, the town was called Bellaire. Several railroads built lines through Bellaire in the 1850s that stimulated the growth of local industries such as coal mining, clay, limestone and glass manufacturing. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV88_B01F03_02
Subjects: Bellaire (Ohio); Ohio River; Bridges--Ohio; Landscape photography; Aerial views;
Places: Bellaire (Ohio); Belmont County (Ohio)
 
Austen's Cologne trade card
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Austen's Cologne trade card  Save
Description: Dated ca. 1900, this trade card advertises Austen's 'Forest [and] Flower' Cologne sold by Wemple B. Company in New York. The colorful card features a young lady wearing a hat over her blonde curls. The reverse of the card reads "Austen's Forest Flower Cologne. The most fashionable perfume of the day. It possesses that rare and indescribable quality so much admired by persons of refined and cultivated taste, a matchless combination of odors, forming a most wonderfully lasting bouquet. No individual odor predominating over others. Price-25 cts. per Bottle. Large Bottles 75 cts. Sold by all druggists and fancy goods dealers throughout the country. Manufactured by W.J. Austen, Oswego, N.Y. Wholesale Agents, William M. Wilson & Co., Philadelphia, Pa. For sale by S.Q. Hamilton & Co., Bellaire, Ohio. A perfumed Japanese Handkerchief furnished with a bottle of Forest Flower Cologne." View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: VFM5933_04
Subjects: Cosmetics industry; Advertisements; Perfumes; Health and hygiene; Bellaire (Ohio)
Places: Bellaire (Ohio); Belmont County (Ohio)
 
Hoyt's German Cologne trade card
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Hoyt's German Cologne trade card  Save
Description: Dated ca. 1900, this is a colorful trade card advertising Hoyt's German Cologne. The card features pink roses with a young girl's head in the central flower with the caption "Hoyt's German Cologne." The reverse reads "Hoyt's German Cologne. The most Fragrant and Lasting of all Perfumes. Beware of counterfeits and imitations. We put up no article of perfumery excepting Hoyt's German Cologne; any other preparation represented as coming from us is an imposition and a fraud. Ask for Hoyt's German Cologne, and before purchasing see that the name is blown in the bottle, the signature of the proprietors printed in red ink across the label, and as an additional guarantee of genuineness, observe our private United States Revenue Stamp over the cork. Trial Size, Price 25 cents; Large Bottles, $1.00. E.W. Hoyt & CO., Proprietors, Lowell, Mass. for sale by Husbands & Inskeep, 308 Union and 1125 Belmont Sts., South Bellaire, Ohio, dealers in drugs, patent medicine, chemicals, fancy and toilet articles, brushes, perfumery, &c., &c." View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: VFM5933_05
Subjects: Cosmetics industry; Advertisements; Perfumes; Health and hygiene; Bellaire (Ohio)
Places: Bellaire (Ohio); Belmont County (Ohio)
 
Miss E. Zoeckler Millinery and Fancy Goods trade card
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Miss E. Zoeckler Millinery and Fancy Goods trade card  Save
Description: Dated ca. 1900, this trade card advertises Miss E. Zoeckler Millinery and Fancy Goods, located at 208 32nd Street in Bellaire, Ohio. The card features a young girl with a book, standing outside. She wears a straw hat with a green ribbon which matches the trim on her pink dress and the green cloth around her waist. She also has a brooch on her collar, and a gold bracelet around each wrist. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: VFM5933_08
Subjects: Advertisements; Hats; Fashion; Dress accessories; Clothing and dress; Bellaire (Ohio)
Places: Bellaire (Ohio); Belmont County (Ohio)
 
Hoyt's German Cologne trade card
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Hoyt's German Cologne trade card  Save
Description: Dated ca. 1900, this is a colorful trading card advertising Hoyt's German Cologne. The card features a little girl leaning on a red cloth with yellow roses draped over it. The advertisement reads "Perfumed with Hoyt's German Cologne, the most fragrant and lasting of all perfumes, " "Use Rubifoam for the teeth. Deliciously flavored." The trading card prices the cologne at 25 cents for a trial size bottle, 50 cents for medium, and $1.00 for a large bottle, and the Rubifoam at 25 cents a bottle. The lower right corner reads "Copyrights 1891." The reverse has a tiny calendar for each of the twelve months, with a house and a pond in the background. The bottom of the card reads "Hoyt's German Cologne has been known for over twenty years as the most fragrant and lasting of all perfumes. Do not confound it with the numerous trashy perfumes that usurp its name, or style of bottle. Refuse substitutes. Trial size 25 cents, medium size 50 cents, large bottle $1.00. Put up by E.W. Hoyt & Co. Lowell, Mass. U.S.A. Manufacturers of Rubifoam for the teeth." A stamp below reads "C.M. Wyrick, Apothecary, Belmont St., Also Gravel Hill, Bellaire, O." View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: VFM5933_01
Subjects: Cosmetics industry; Advertisements; Perfumes; Health and hygiene; Bellaire (Ohio)
Places: Bellaire (Ohio); Belmont County (Ohio)
 
Imperial Glass Museum (exterior)
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Imperial Glass Museum (exterior)  Save
Description: The exterior of the Imperial Glass Museum in Bellaire. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL06703
Subjects: Glass industry; Historical museums--Ohio; Belmont County (Ohio)
Places: Bellaire (Ohio); Belmont County (Ohio); Ohio
 
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21 matches on "Bellaire (Ohio)"
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